Sustainable Bioenergy 2019
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-817654-2.00001-0
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Lignocellulosic feedstocks for the production of bioethanol: availability, structure, and composition

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Cited by 28 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…The major sources of nanocelluloses include agricultural deposits, wood and plants, feedstocks, algae, bacteria, and wildlife as elaborated in Table 2. [44] pineapple leaf, sunflower stalk [36] water hyacinth [45] Algae algae [46] bacteria bacteria [47] Waste municipal solid waste [48]…”
Section: Nanocellulose Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The major sources of nanocelluloses include agricultural deposits, wood and plants, feedstocks, algae, bacteria, and wildlife as elaborated in Table 2. [44] pineapple leaf, sunflower stalk [36] water hyacinth [45] Algae algae [46] bacteria bacteria [47] Waste municipal solid waste [48]…”
Section: Nanocellulose Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering ten years from 2003 to , Cherubin et al (2018 documented that the world has produced 3830 million metric tons (MT) of crop residues from agriculture. Deshavath et al (2019) reported that in 2016 alone top four agricultural production countries -China, India, the USA, and Brazil -have burnt 181.8 MT of crop residues in open fields, contributing 15.8 MT of CO2 emission to the earth's atmosphere. It is happening not because of farmer's unawareness of the environmental impact of open burning of crop residues but because of a lack of idea and information about low-carbon and cost-effective technologies (Kumar & Singh, 2021).…”
Section: Causes Of Co2 Emissions From Agriculture Sectormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since it found that ethanol-diesel blends were technically appropriate for existing diesel engines, bioethanol has attracted worldwide attention as a partial or full substitute fossil (Deshavath, Veeranki and Goud, 2019). It primarily used as a fuel by blending ethanol with diesel (Hansen, Zhang and Lyne, 2005).…”
Section: Ethanol-diesel Emulsion Preparationmentioning
confidence: 99%